Yayın: Switching to long-acting cabotegravir and rilpivirine in Turkey: Perspectives from people living with HIV in a setting of increasing HIV incidence
Dosyalar
Tarih
Kurum Yazarları
Yazarlar
Dumlu, Rıdvan
Çiçek, Yeliz
Kapmaz, Mahir
Derin, Okan
Akalin, Halis
Onal, Ugur
Özdemir, Egemen
Hatipoğlu, Çiğdem Ataman
Ertem, Günay Tuncer
Şener, Alper
Danışman
Dil
Türü
Yayıncı:
Mdpi
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Cilt Başlığı
Özet
Background and Objectives: Long-acting cabotegravir and rilpivirine (LA-CAB/RPV) offers an alternative to daily oral antiretroviral therapy (ART) for people living with HIV (PLWH). Although LA-CAB/RPV has been approved in Turkey, the country remains in the pre-rollout period, and national data on patient perspectives are lacking. This is the first nationwide study from Turkey, a setting of increasing HIV incidence, assessing PLWH perspectives on switching to LA-CAB/RPV and the influence of motivational factors on treatment preferences. Materials and Methods: A prospective, multicenter, cross-sectional study was conducted across 11 HIV treatment centers representing all regions of Turkey. Virologically suppressed PLWH meeting current eligibility criteria for LA-CAB/RPV were included. Treatment preferences (switch to LA-CAB/RPV or remain on oral ART) and five anticipated motivational domains, namely perceived efficacy, safety, convenience, privacy, and cost, were systematically assessed through structured, face-to-face interviews. Results: Among 200 eligible participants, 86% (n = 172) preferred switching to LA-CAB/RPV. In all subgroups, LA-CAB/RPV was preferred over oral ART, except for those with no formal literacy. Prior awareness of LA-CAB/RPV was significantly associated with the switching preference (p < 0.001), with healthcare providers being the most common source of information, at 45.5% (n = 172) (p < 0.001). Residential proximity to the healthcare center (p = 0.018) and all motivational factors significantly influenced the preference (p < 0.05). Notably, when participants who initially chose to remain on oral ART were asked whether they would reconsider switching if injections were administered every six months, overall preference for long-acting therapy increased from 86% to 98%. Conclusions: High clinical eligibility and strong acceptability for LA-CAB/RPV were observed among Turkish PLWH. Our findings demonstrate that structured motivational factors significantly influence the treatment preference. Addressing these patient-centered factors and logistical barriers may support the successful integration of long-acting therapies into routine HIV care. Future longer-interval agents may improve patient-centered acceptability.
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Konusu
Single-tablet regimens, Drug resistance, Prevention, Long-acting injectable therapy, Cabotegravir/rilpivirine, Motivational factors, PLWH perspectives, Turkey, Science & technology, Life sciences & biomedicine, Medicine, general & internal, General & internal medicine
